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Art and Photography - Urban and Land Use Planning books

Posted in Art and Photography (Saturday, September 6, 2008)

By Techne Press. The regular list price is $35.00. Sells new for $30.00. There are some available for $41.80.
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No comments about Visualizing the Invisible: Towards an Urban Space (Spacelab Books).




Posted in Art and Photography (Saturday, September 6, 2008)

Written by John Reader. By Atlantic Monthly Press. The regular list price is $26.00. Sells new for $5.75. There are some available for $2.04.
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3 comments about Cities: A Magisterial Exploration of the Nature and Impact of the City from Its Beginnings to the Mega-Conurbations of Today.

  1. When I picked up this book, Cities by John Reader, I wasn't sure what I was going to think of it. I mean, c'mon, its a book about cities. But, I was pleasantly surprised. It is engaging book and one that tells interesting stories.

    I really enjoyed the early portions of the book as it looks over the ancient cities and discusses how they were formed. My historical knowledge of ancient cities is sorely lacking, so it was interesting to read how organized these cities were and the structure that made up these cities.

    The biggest complaint though that I had was that the story seemed to not quite know where to go from chapter to chapter. You begin by thinking the book would flow from ancient times and just progress to present time but it does not. It bounces back and forth from what goes into making up a city to plagues in a city to how to feed cities, etc. It often seemed disjointed.

    The story telling though is very good. The facts and figures are interesting (it was interesting to read of the difficulties to get food/grain into Rome 2000 years ago and that there were over 6 million individual loads taken from the shores to downtown Rome to be able to feed the Romans). I wish the organization was a bit better, but the book was enjoyable nonetheless.


  2. This book seems to be getting good reviews, and to be honest I am not completely sure why. Let me begin with the good. It is an easy read and the story told is interesting. However this is not particularly a history and there are parts of the book that left me wondering what the point was. On the positive side, Mr. Reader begins the book with a particularly fascinating account of early cities beginning in Turkey and going to Sumaria.

    From here though he gets lost. He devotes very little time to Greece and Rome and then seems to gloss through history. Some of what he relates, while interesting sheds little light on cities or their development. His chapter on Francesco deMarco Datini comes to mind first. It is an interesting story and I am sure he has something to do with the development of cities or lives in them, but I was left unsure what. Much could be told about the rise of Renaissance Italy and its city-states such as Florence, Venice, Genoa, and Milan. But little is offered.

    Then there is his attempt to make political points. Sometimes it is pro-free market, sometimes pro-environment, sometimes it seems he is off to fight a battle against poverty that while maybe worthy, seems out of context. In fact at the end of many chapters he tries to bring in a modern point all too often. For example there is a chapter on the plague. It is interesting, but he never really explains how it was defeated in Europe. Instead we get some point on doctors and hospitals that seems to be a call for medical reform of some type. There is also a chapter on Hiroshima, which begins well enough and promises to hold interest. Questions like how did people live there after the bomb or how was the city rebuilt pop into my mind. From there he goes into a discussion of solar energy. What is the connection? What do we learn about the city in general or Hiroshima in specific?

    In short, this book wanders so much in such a short space I would give it only 1 star, but the stories, even though off-topic are interesting so I give this book three stars but suggest anybody really trying to learn history start somewhere else like say Alexandra Ritchie's book on Berlin.


  3. With a subject as broad and diverse in its scope, and is as potentially weighty as humanities' urban complexes, one would think a book of the same name would cover over 500 pages and be detrimental to simple leisure browsing -- not so: Cities is a lively, engaging, and vigorous revelation of just how cities evolved, what made them thrive or decline, and how they transformed themselves to cultural centers over the centuries. Contrary to popular belief, cities actually fostered the growth of farming and hold a symbiotic and close relationship with the countryside and trade routes: John Reader's Cities provides a map of changes and the social, political and economic connections between cities and country around the world. The lively format the author John Reader created for Cities makes for an exceptional historical coverage which lends particularly well to leisure reading.


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Posted in Art and Photography (Saturday, September 6, 2008)

Written by Colin Chant. By Routledge. The regular list price is $59.95. Sells new for $40.92. There are some available for $14.06.
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No comments about Pre-Industrial Cities and Technology Reader: Cities and Technology.




Posted in Art and Photography (Saturday, September 6, 2008)

By Actar. Sells new for $49.95. There are some available for $88.44.
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No comments about In the Chinese City: Perspectives on the Transmutations of an Empire.




Posted in Art and Photography (Saturday, September 6, 2008)

Written by Thom Nickels. By Arcadia Publishing. The regular list price is $26.99. Sells new for $17.71. There are some available for $19.03.
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3 comments about Philadelphia Architecture (PA) (Images of America).

  1. This is a great book, very inclusive of Philadelphia architecture both old and new. I liked the inclusion of "pop" architecture like the Best Buy building in the Northeast. After all, this is a book that covers more than just historic architecture. It was refreshing to see that the writing was not stodgy or academic (yawn). The writing tends towards the clever and poetic; check out the caption headlines under the photographs. This is easily, I think, the best book on Philadelphia architecture to appear in the last 15 years.


  2. Images of America books depend on their photos for their quality. About half of this book is nice historical photos. But much of it is illustrated with mediocre contemporary snaps. Also, given Philadelphia's high level of architectural splendor, it includes lots of unimpressive modern buildings. Finally, a fair number of mistakes. Worst goof was a photo & caption for one house (Drexel mansion I believe) was completely repeated about 50 pages away from its first appearance.


  3. This book has some very nice pictures of buildings and streetscapes around the city, covering a broad swath of the city's history. The focus is on the photos, with a short essay introducing the book and captions accompanying each shot. The photographs are good, as is the quality of the book's construction.

    The downfall of this work is the writing. Captions read as though they haven't seen even the cursory glance of an editor. Spelling and factual errors plague the short captions. The mistakes were so glaring, frequent and distracting as to detract from the experience of the book.


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Posted in Art and Photography (Saturday, September 6, 2008)

Written by Robert Sommer. By Prentice Hall Trade. There are some available for $1.07.
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No comments about Personal Space: The Behavioral Basis of Design (Spectrum Books).




Posted in Art and Photography (Saturday, September 6, 2008)

Written by Avi Friedman. By McGill-Queen's University Press. The regular list price is $22.95. Sells new for $18.13. There are some available for $14.89.
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No comments about The Grow Home.




Posted in Art and Photography (Saturday, September 6, 2008)

By University of Washington Press. Sells new for $25.00. There are some available for $14.63.
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No comments about Urban Forest Landscapes: Integrating Multidisciplinary Perspectives.




Posted in Art and Photography (Saturday, September 6, 2008)

By Birkhäuser Basel. The regular list price is $61.95. Sells new for $40.65. There are some available for $40.88.
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No comments about Spielräume / Changing Places: Zeitgenössische deutsche Landschaftsarchitektur / Contemporary German Landscape Architecture.




Posted in Art and Photography (Saturday, September 6, 2008)

Written by Manuel De Sola-morales. By Col-Legi D'Arquitectes de Catalunya. The regular list price is $46.95. Sells new for $32.25. There are some available for $32.14.
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No comments about Ten Lessons on Barcelona.




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Last updated: Sat Sep 6 01:44:41 EDT 2008